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The politics of ports in the Horn: War, peace and Red Sea rivalries

For over 25 years, maritime strategy and port development in the Red
Sea and Gulf of Aden appeared relatively static. Eritrea looked inwards,
neglecting its coast. Djibouti flourished, lucratively embracing
Ethiopia’s trade, overseas investors and foreign military bases.
Somalia’s shores became synonymous with piracy, prompting Western and
Asian naval manoeuvres, quietly ensuring free passage to the Suez Canal.
But now things may be changing. Ports in the Horn of Africa and Gulf of Aden are suddenly in the spotlight.
Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has repeatedly emphasised port
developments on his whistle-stop tour of neighbouring countries,
including Somalia, Sudan and Djibouti. The rapprochement between
Ethiopia and Eritrea raises the possibility that the mothballed Eritrean
ports of Assab and Massawa could be rehabilitated. And just 25km across
the Bab al-Mandab straits, the war in Yemen has given nearby African
ports new geostrategic significance; the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has
been using its base in Eritrea’s port of Assab to besiege and bomb
Yemen’s crucial port of Hodeida since mid-June
These developments beg three key questions. Firstly, why are
countries in the Horn of Africa developing so many new ports? Secondly,
who will finance these projects? And finally, how do control of ports in
the Horn relate to the war in Yemen?

Why so many new ports?

The first question is the most straightforward. The Horn needs
improved ports and infrastructure to handle the current pace of
Ethiopia’s economic growth, on which broader regional integration and
prosperity relies. This is why ports have been one of Prime Minister
Abiy’s priorities on his foreign visits.
In Djibouti, he called for joint investment in the tiny nation’s
ports. In Sudan, he and President Omar al-Bashir presented plans to
modernise Port Sudan together. And in Somalia, he announced that
Ethiopia would work with Mogadishu to upgrade four Somali ports.
Land-locked Ethiopia is clearly looking to break its heavy dependence
on Djibouti, which has handled 90% of its foreign trade since the
border war with Eritrea was triggered in 1998. However, it is crucial to
understand that Addis is only seeking to diversify its access to the
sea – and drive-down freight costs via increased competition – rather
than reduce its use of Djibouti. In fact, these trade volumes will
continue to grow as Ethiopian, Chinese and Djiboutian authorities have
invested heavily in upgrading and enhancing infrastructure capacity
along the Djibouti corridor.
Earlier this year, the centrepiece of this strategy – the 750km
railway linking Addis Ababa to Djibouti – began full operations. The
$3.4 billion project – financed, constructed and managed by China – has
drastically cut the time and cost of shuttling containers between
Ethiopia’s capital, its nascent manufacturing export zones, and
Djibouti’s ports. The development of prospective oil and gas projects in
Ethiopian Ogaden and neighbouring Somali states, which would also be
exported via Djibouti, reaffirms the port nation’s ongoing centrality to
regional growth and integration.
This relationship is as crucial to Djibouti as it is to Ethiopia.
Port transit fees are the mainstay of Djibouti’s exchequer and it has
invested substantially in further developing this infrastructure. It
constructed vast new container and cargo facilities in the form of the
$590 million Multi-Purpose Port (MPP) at Doraleh. Meanwhile, it has
begun developing smaller ports too. Tadjourah, is designed to handle
Ethiopia’s potash; Damerjog will have facilities to export livestock and
liquid natural gas (LNG).
Djibouti’s ambitious “Vision 2035”
blueprint for national development sees its harbours as a hub for Asian
transhipments, servicing the entire region. As it develops ports and
extensive Free Trade Zones
with its Chinese partners, the entrepôt nation will remain critical for
Ethiopia and prospects of regional economic integration, irrespective
of developments in Eritrea or Somalia. It also seeks to maintain its
competitively vis-à-vis Kenya’s LAPSSET corridor, which aims to link its coast at Lamu to South Sudan and Ethiopia.
Red sea ports map.

Who’s paying?

The second question this raises is who is paying for all this.
For Ethiopia and Djibouti, the key actor is China.
Djibouti’s major infrastructure initiatives are being financed and
spearheaded by Chinese companies. Djibouti’s new multi-million MPP
facility at Doraleh, for example, is managed and part-owned by China
Merchants Group (CMG). Since 2013, the Hong Kong-based conglomerate has
owned 23.5% of Djibouti’s Port and Free Zone Authority (DPFZA) and, in early 2017, bought a minority stake in Ethiopia’s state-owned shipping line, whose home port is Djibouti.
CMG is a leading commercial actor in numerous ports along China’s
Maritime Silk Road, which links shipping lanes along Beijing’s global
Belt and Road Initiative. As Thierry Pairault
has highlighted, CMG’s role in Djibouti mirrors Chinese involvement in
ports and logistics elsewhere in Africa. However, Djibouti is unique in
two ways: firstly, it is a telecommunications hub where several key
transcontinental submarine fibre-optic cables meet; and secondly, it has
been home to China’s first permanent overseas naval base since 2017,
when it opened next to the MPP, barely 12km from the US AFRICOM base at
Camp Lemonnier.
Chinese companies also have significant stakes in Ethiopia’s oil and
gas fields in the Ogaden region. In November 2017, they agreed to
construct a 650km oil pipeline to Djibouti and proposed building a LNG refinery at Damerjog.
Map of Djibouti ports.
The other key actor is the UAE.
Until the opening of the China-run MPP in Djibouti last year, all of
Ethiopia’s container traffic was channelled through the adjacent Doraleh Container Terminal
(DCT). This facility had been managed and part-owned by the Dubai-based
company DP World since 2008, but this February, Djibouti unilaterally
terminated its contract and nationalised its 33% shareholding. This was
the culmination of a fractious six-year legal battle.
DP World is seeking compensation for its lost assets, and until the
case is resolved in a London court, the Djiboutian government will have
difficulty selling the sequestered shares legally. However, given Abiy’s
surprise proposal that Ethiopia and Djibouti hold stakes in each
other’s ports and telecommunications, it is possible that Ethiopia may
obtain a minority shareholding in Doraleh Container Terminal. This could
plausibly be part of a deal involving Chinese loans that could also see
CMG gain a bigger slice of DPFZA equity.
While this spat has seen UAE’s long-standing involvement in Djibouti
diminish, DP World is simultaneously increasing its footprint in
neighbouring ports. In May 2016, the company signed a 30-year deal worth
$440 million to develop Berbera port in the self-declared state of
Somaliland. In March 2018, DP World scaled back its proposed investment,
but announced that Ethiopia would take a 19% stake in the project,
alongside its own 51% share and the Somaliland government’s 30%.
The company is also investing in building a highway to link the port
to Ethiopia’s border. Meanwhile, the deal has allowed the UAE, which is
playing an increasingly central role in the war in Yemen, to develop a
naval base alongside Berbera.
The DP World deal is the first large international contract signed by
the autonomous government of Somaliland. This has angered the Federal
Government of Somalia, which doesn’t recognise the Somaliland
government’s sovereignty over Berbera. This has, in turn, fuelled a spat between Somalia and the UAE,
leading the latter to withdraw military supplies and advisors and close
the hospital it was funding in Mogadishu. The row also compounded
allegations that the Somali government is being manipulated by Qatar and
its ally Turkey. Qatar reportedly helped finance President Mohamed
“Farmaajo’s” election campaign, while Turkey is the Somali government’s
leading economic partner.

What are the UAE’s plans for Yemen and the Horn?

The fact that the UAE’s involvement in Berbera has enabled it to set
up a naval base there leads us to our third question: how is competition
over new container and cargo ports linked to the war in Yemen?
This is the most difficult to answer, but it is clear that as the
UAE’s prosecution of the war against the Houthis has intensified, so has
their engagement in the Horn of Africa. Since 2015, the UAE has massed
military and naval hardware alongside covert training and detention
facilities in the Eritrean port of Assab. Its armed forces are also now
present in Berbera in Somaliland (as well as on Socotra island and Yemen’s southern coast).
Is the war in Yemen also the reason that UAE authorities now appear
to be investing energetically in diplomatic overtures to both Ethiopia
and Eritrea? In May, Prime Minister Abiy visited the UAE. In June, Crown
Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan of Abu Dhabi (MBZ) returned
the favour. During this visit, the UAE’s de facto ruler
announced a $1 billion emergency loan to ease Ethiopia’s acute forex
shortage and promised further foreign direct investment.
It was then an Emirates plane that ferried the Eritrean delegation to
Addis on 26 June. Furthermore, Eritrea’s President Isaias Afewerki was
subsequently welcomed to Abu Dhabi prior to Abiy’s arrival and effusive
proclamation of peace in Asmara on 8 July.
There are also recent hints from Saudi Arabia and UAE suggesting they
may back Ethio-Eritrean rapprochement with substantial funds. Some
analysts claim these would be used firstly to rehabilitate Eritrea’s
ports of Assab and Massawa. They would then help finance infrastructure
linking Assab to Addis Ababa and, far more ambitiously, Massawa to
Mekelle, the capital of Ethiopia’s Tigray region.
This may be wishful thinking and/or hubris. Nevertheless, Ethiopia
has ambitious, fully-costed long-term infrastructure plans, involving
rail, road, air, and sea routes. Encouraging rival Arab and Chinese
investors to compete for a share of the profits generated by integrating
Eritrea’s ports back into Addis’s long-term infrastructure plans should
be relatively straightforward. However, it is far less certain whether
Eritrea’s dilapidated authorities can undertake domestic economic
reforms and facilitate competitive tendering for new port and maritime
services while fulfilling short-term pledges to the UAE.
It is unclear how realistic the suggestion of Arab finance behind the
peace-deal is. It is also impossible to tell whether the UAE’s recent
diplomatic activism reflects a medium-term political strategy or whether
it is simply an opportunistic response to changes in the Horn and a
tactical stop-gap in the bloody stalemate in Yemen.
Does the UAE have a concerted plan in the Horn of Africa? Does it
foresee that its military lease of Assab could be transferred to DP
World once Yemen’s Houthis have been bombarded or starved into
submission?
It is too early to tell, but what is clear is that the ports in the
Horn of Africa are proving to be of increasing interest to rival Arab
and Chinese investors and that the politics of ports have become central
in shaping political alliances and enmities across the region.

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